Entrepreneur Plus - Short White
For Subscribers

How One Man Used Artificial Intelligence to Generate Genuine Sales LeadsA CRM startup gets the hookup to find leads via machine learning about its best customers.

ByGrant Davis

This story appears in the2015年12月issue of雷竞技手机版.Subscribe »

Brian Higbee
Following the leads: Bernhard Peters of Ebsta.

If there's one thing software company Ebsta understands, it's customer relationship management. The San Diego- and London-based company sells a $10 per month per user Chrome browser extension that syncs customers' email accounts to the Salesforce database to streamline the onerous task of updating a CRM system. But finding new prospects for Ebsta is difficult and, as vice president of sales Bernhard Peters points out, expensive -- especially for a company with roughly $1 million in annual revenue. "We're still a tiny company," Peters says. "We have to be careful who we chase; we don't have a lot of money or manpower to spare. Buying lists never works; they're out of date. And data-mining companies charge at least $25,000 upfront, with no guarantee of ROI."

The Fix

Peters was in a San Diego restaurant when he overheard Olin Hyde, co-founder and CEO of Englue, explaining how his artificial intelligence product LeadCrunch could mine the web to uncover leads based on names of a company's best customers. It's the same technology Englue developed for a Lockheed Martin contract with the U.S. Navy.

This is a subscriber-only article. Join Entrepreneur+today for access

Related Topics

Business News

This State Just Replaced New York as the Country's Second Most Valuable Housing Market

A recent report by Zillow found that Florida has edged out New York as the second most valuable housing market in the U.S., while California is still No. 1.

Business News

'Not Much Financial Education' — Yet Millennials Have Boomers and Gen X Beat When It Comes to Retirement Savings. Here's Why.

千禧一代会的很少er homes and make less money — but they're on track for a better retirement.

领导

Introverts Who Use This Secret Weapon Can Be More Powerful Than Extroverts in the Workplace

Less extroverted colleagues are often misunderstood and underestimated — but their talent for one thing in particular sets them up for success.

Business News

'Earth Shaking News': Fans Rejoice Over the Return of 'Retired' McDonald's Cult-Favorite Item

The McRib last appeared on menus in 2022 during the company's self-proclaimed "farewell tour" for the sandwich.

Business News

Two of Amazon's Most Popular Prime Features Might Actually Be Illegal

Among the practices under scrutiny by the FTC are Amazon's "Buy Now" button and the shipping component of Prime.